Orlando Sentinel

DeSantis signs law that targets teachers union

- By Brendan Farrington

TALLAHASSE­E — Teachers and most other government workers will have to write monthly checks if they want to stay in their union after Gov. Ron DeSantis signed a bill Tuesday banning automatic dues deductions from public employees’ paychecks.

The bill also gives employees the right to immediatel­y quit a union for no reason and requires unions to recertify if the number of dues-paying members drops below 60% of those eligible to join.

“If you want to join, you can, but you write a check and you hand it over. That is gonna lead to more take-home pay for teachers,” DeSantis said at a bill-signing ceremony in Miami.

It was one of several bills that DeSantis signed that affect education, including new term limits for school board members, restrictio­ns on student social media use and protection­s for teachers who report administra­tors they believe are violating state education policies.

While DeSantis touted the bills as giving more freedom to teachers, the Florida Education Associatio­n disputed that by saying the actions were punishment for opposing his policies, similar to the way DeSantis has used his office to seek retributio­n on others who disagree with him.

“The governor may have let his desire to crush perceived opponents get the best of him,” teachers union President Andrew Spar said in a news release. “This new law grossly oversteps in trying to silence teachers, staff, professors and most other public employees. We will not go quietly — our students and our profession­s are simply too important.”

The measure also forces public employee unions to tell members

the salaries of their five top compensate­d officials. The law doesn’t apply to unions that represent police or firefighte­rs, however.

Spar likened the action to the way DeSantis punished Disney World for speaking out against legislatio­n that banned discussion of sexual preference­s and gender identity in school lessons. He said the governor’s policies are contributi­ng to a teacher shortage.

Another bill DeSantis signed will give teachers the benefit of the doubt when dealing with disruptive students and would protect teachers who turn in administra­tors and school board members who violate state education policy.

The law comes at a time when school districts are trying to implement changes imposed by DeSantis, including restrictio­ns on how race and sexuality can be taught in schools and more power given to parents seeking to ban books.

DeSantis recounted how teachers unions opposed his ban on mask mandates during the COVID-19 pandemic and the school districts that required them despite the governor’s order.

“What did some of the school districts and school unions do? They defied the state. We ended up having to go to court over this because you had a handful of rogue districts that thought they knew better than the elected representa­tives and the parents of this state,” DeSantis said.

In 2021, DeSantis threatened to withhold money from districts that had mandatory mask policies. All districts eventually complied.

“There’s no question — if you look at COVID, locking kids out of school — the unions not only were for it, they were instrument­al in ensuring it,” DeSantis said.

Another new law will allow teachers to set classroom phone use policies, such as having students hand over their phones at the beginning of class. It also bans the use of TikTok on school equipment and doesn’t allow students to use school internet to access social media unless it’s part of an assignment.

“Social media, it has more problems than it solves, and I think it does more harm than good,” DeSantis said. “Put those devices down and live life normally, and I think we’re going to be so much better off.”

Another new law he signed Tuesday will reduce term limits for school board members from 12 years to eight years.

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